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Stories indexed with the term ‘tuition’

UM FY10 = Tuition Hike + Financial Aid

UM briefing

No, these aren't the University of Michigan Regents. Reporters from the Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor News, Michigan Radio, Detroit News and other media outlets attended a briefing on the budget with UM provost Teresa Sullivan, sitting at the head of the table. To her right is Phil Hanlon, vice provost for academic and budgetary affairs. (Photo by the writer.)

University of Michigan Board of Regents meeting (June 18, 2009): Despite dissent from two regents over a 5.6% tuition hike, the University of Michigan Board of Regents approved several FY2010 budgets at their Thursday afternoon meeting – including budgets for the general fund, health system, and athletic department.

Though budget presentations – and speaking turns by each regent on the budget, most of them reading from prepared statements – took up much of the meeting, the board approved several other items, among them: 1) changes to UM’s technology transfer policy, 2) authorization to demolish seven vacant buildings that make up the Kresge complex at the corner of Ann Street and Zina Pitcher Place, 3) approval to hire an architect for a major expansion to the G.G.Brown building on north campus, and 4) design approval for a new intercollegiate soccer stadium.

We’ll begin our report with a look at non-budget agenda items. [Full Story]

Students Press UM on Tuition, Sustainability

Regent Libby Maynard talks with Bob Kelch,

UM regent Libby Maynard talks with Bob Kelch, the university's executive vice president for medical affairs, before the March 19 Board of Regents meeting. Kelch is retiring from that position, and his replacement, Ora Hirsch Pescovitz, will be starting the job in May.

University of Michigan Board of Regents (March 19, 2009): Much of this month’s meeting of the University of Michigan Board of Regents was spent hearing from students who were advocating for three issues: A coordinated sustainability effort on campus, a tuition freeze, and UM’s investment in HEI Hotels & Resorts.

In her opening remarks, UM president Mary Sue Coleman praised the performance of several athletic teams, including men’s basketball, hockey, swimming and diving – all were competing at the national level, most notably the basketball team in a NCAA tournament appearance. She said in the midst of this was also sad news about the sudden death of Matthew Hilton-Watson, a 40-year-old UM-Flint professor who collapsed in class and died earlier this month, as well as the death of Bill Davidson, whom Coleman described as a “true gentleman,” philanthropist and exceptional business leader.

Coleman used the reference to Davidson’s business acumen as a segue into announcing that UM will ask employees to share a greater amount of their health care costs. She described employee health care as the university budget’s fastest-growing expense and a threat to its core mission. Details of those changes were released on Friday, the day after the regents meeting. [Full Story]

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